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Featuring original works of fine art photography and limited-edition prints by regional and local artists. 372 Fore Street Portland Maine 04101 207 874-8084 www.forestreetgallery.com South Bristol 8 x 10 oil by Brad Betts Fore Street Shadows 14x11 oil on canvas by Madeleine Hopkins Featuring original works of fine art photography and limited-edition prints by regional and local artists. 372 Fore Street Portland Maine 04101 207 874-8084 www.forestreetgallery.com Monhegan Morning Paul Black 11 x 14 oil THE PLACE FOR NEW USED BOOKS ON THE PENINSULA HOW PORTLAND DOES A BOOKSTORE Monument Square Portland 207-772-4045 www.longfellowbooks.com Plus Cards Journals Gifts Portlands Largest Selection of Magazines 8 p o r t l a n d monthly magazine Editorial Colin W. Sargent Editor Publisher Sand Wind and Stars L ets set the perfect mood for the summer ahead by understand- ing sand. You may wonder if sand re- ally needs an update. But if dazzling windswept beaches are important to you if you dare to let your friends know that in your private moments while dipping your imagination into a great book while summoning the image of your footprints across countless summers while re-watch- ing any Nicholas Sparks movie you may be an arenophile read on. The quick answer to what is sand is sil- icon dioxide in the form of quartz accord- ing to Live Science. Wind and violent storms across eons grind quartz crystals and mica into sparkling grains of sand. Its finer and surely more romantic than gravel. Imagine a Studio 54 of geology. A piece of grit shows up the bouncer looks at his list. Are you .0625 mm or 116 mm to 2 mm Well I was this morning. Thats good. Because if you were smaller youd be silt. If you were larger youd be grav- el. Are you familiar at all with the Krumbein phi scale Beyond this do you have the requi- site sparkle Which is not to say that you cant be sand if youre a tiny pink fragment of coral lime- stone or shell. You might be a garnet or a gem. Quartz does not make a beach alone. I had no idea there was such a thing as star sand see photo. Amusing Planet takes us closer to re- veal that these stars are really the exoskeletons of tiny one-celled organ- isms barely a millimeter across called Baculogypsina sphaerulata that live among the sea grass. Their home base is a celebrated star-sand beach located on the northern tip of the remote Iriomote Island in Okinawa Pre- fecture in Japan. Writing for The Economist Rebecca Willis feels sand doesnt just stick to our toes it has a way of getting inside our heads. People who love sand are called arenophiles from the Lat- in harena for sand which was spread over the floor of the Colosseum in Rome to soak up the blood of combat and which also gives us the word arena. Not quite so romantic. What that leaves arena-lovers to call themselves I dont know. Sand has properties which even the non- arenophile may be able to appreciate. It is self-sorting grains of the same size group together as the different ingredients in a box of muesli do that is why when the grains are different co- lours you can find exquisite painterly patterns left by the tide on a beach. When sand is poured into a pile the slant of the slope made by the edge of the pile is called the angle of repose. Lovely. Let this summer be graceful and unhurried. Maines timeless beaches can afford to take the long view.